Sunday, March 22, 2026
Home Blog Page 982

FoRB: MEPs Van Dalen and Fidanza launch the 2017-2021 worrying report

0
FoRB Report 2017-2021
FoRB Report 2017-2021

In a statement published by the European Parliament’s Intergroup on Freedom of Religion or Belief and Religious Tolerance ( FoRB & RT ), they inform of “the presentation of the periodic report published by the Intergroup” which was held on Tuesday 22nd March.

EU and FoRB 2017-2021 report

The FoRB report, which outlines the “state of the art of religious freedom in the world” and discusses the “European institutions’ actions to protect religious freedom”, was drafted in collaboration with some of the most important associations and NGOs in the sector, involving “different representatives of the faiths, from Christian associations to Baha’i, Muslims and Jews”.

Among the speakers, in addition to the co-chairs of the intergroup Carlo FIDANZA (FdI- Ecr) and Peter Van Dalen (EPP), who opened the session, the attendees could find Oksana Oleynikova, director of the Good Shepherd children’s home in Ukraine, who “updated those present on the current situation in Ukraine”, Iannis Argyropoulos, Head of Unit for Asia-Pacific and South Asia Regional Affairs of the European External Action Service; Marcela Szymanski, editor-in-chief of the ”Religious Freedom in the World” dossier at the Pontifical Foundation Aid to the Church in Need and Willy Fautre, Director of Human Rights Without Borders.

ForB & RT 2017-2021 report launch with organizers and speakers at the European Parliament.
Courtesy of the EU Parliament’s Intergroup on Freedom of Religion or Belief and Religious Tolerance

Co-chair Carlo FIDANZA recalled that among those persecuted for their faith, “over 360 million Christians experience a high level of persecution and discrimination“.

Today the eyes of the world are rightly focused on the martyrdom of Mariupol” FIDANZA said during his speech of the launching of this report. “With this report, we want to turn the spotlight on another martyrdom that takes place every day in total indifference and which affects millions of believers, especially Christians, who are persecuted worldwide for their beliefs”. “Europe” – concluded FIDANZA – “that perhaps for the first time it is realising how important it is to have a foreign policy, must forcefully put the issue of religious freedom in all bilateral negotiations with countries where this is not guaranteed”

Peter van Dalen, the other co-chair who has been on the business of FoRB for quite a while, said:  “The EU needs to enhance its efforts in promoting and protecting the freedom of religion or belief, as religious freedom is deteriorating in many countries. In EU policy, too often economic interests prevail over human rights commitments. Therefore, the European Commission must reappoint a Special Envoy for the promotion and protection for the freedom of religion or belief as soon as possible.

The report, which has just been published by the FoRB intergroup, selects 10 countries that, according to the NGOs that participated in the survey, are the countries where religious freedom is increasingly restricted.

However, it does not include violations of FoRB in Europe, a long demanded mandate by different Civil Society organizations who believe the EU could be stronger in the influence abroad “if many of the EU member states would have a more strict and broad respect for the local minorities” said one of the NGOs consulted by The European Times.

FoRB in some Non-EU countries

Among the countries covered in the report is China, where forced Sinicisation is underway “at the expense of Uighurs, Falun Gong, Christians and, obviously, Tibetan Buddhists” says the statement published by the Intergroup. “In China, the government is becoming more and more authoritarian in all its policies, enforcing a so-called sinicization of society, in which religion is seen as a threat to the official atheist ideology,said Willy Fautré, Director of Human Rights Without Frontiers.

Fautre said also in the Parliament that “One thing is very disturbing in the report. Among the 11 countries selected by the Intergroup for the deterioration level of religious freedom, 8 are from Asia: Afghanistan, China, India, Iran, Myanmar, Pakistan, Turkey and Vietnam.

A couple of them are Communist countries and the others have a dominant religion enjoying the support of the state and public institutions, either Sunni or Shia Islam, Hinduism or Buddhism.

These Asian countries total a population of 3.4 billion people, which represents 42% of the world population. Religious minorities in such contexts are vulnerable to all sorts of arbitrary restrictions, discrimination, social hostility, violence and killings“.

FoRB experts at the launch of the report
Courtesy of the EU Parliament’s Intergroup on Freedom of Religion or Belief and Religious Tolerance

Pakistan, where the majority of the Sunni population is “aggressive towards minorities and uses anti-blasphemy laws as a tool to regulate private affairs against those who are ‘inconvenient’”, and finally Algeria, Myanmar, Eritrea, Vietnam and Turkey where Erdogan promotes Sunni Islamisation policies to the at the expense of atheists, Christians and Jews.

FoRB in Africa

Nigeria, where “President Buhari has worked to foster an Islamisation of the country and there are continuous persecution by jihadist groups such as Boko Haram, Iswap and local warlords, mainly at the expense of Christians,” said the press release.

Future actions

In the questions and answers section of the launch event, MEP Carlo Fidanza responded to the question about the next steps of the Intergroup, saying that they will continue taking the initiative to address the situation of persecuted minorities worldwide, such as our resolutions on Pakistan and cultural heritage in Nagorno Karabach, or through events” and “will keep pushing for a quick reappointment of a Special Envoy FoRB”.

Full report here:

UN health agency appeals to reverse gains lost in fight against tuberculosis

0
UN health agency appeals to reverse gains lost in fight against tuberculosis
World TB Day is marked on 23 March, and this year, the World Health Organization (WHO) has called for urgent investment in the fight against tuberculosis, “to save millions more lives”.
Although TB is preventable and curable, it remains one of the world’s deadliest infectious killers, WHO noted on Wednesday.

Each day, it claims more than 4,100 lives, and close to 28,000 people fall ill after becoming infected – and this, despite the fact that 66 million lives have been saved since 2000.

The UN health agency pointed out that global spending on TB diagnostics, treatments and prevention in 2020 was less than half the annual global target of $13 billion.

For research and development, an extra $1.1 billion per year is needed.

“Urgent investments are needed to develop and expand access to the most innovative services and tools to prevent, detect and treat TB that could save millions of lives each year, narrow inequities and avert huge economic losses,” said WHO Director-General, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

“These investments offer huge returns for countries and donors, in averted health care costs and increased productivity.”

Conflicts push up deaths

The need for global action is more urgent than ever, the WHO said, as the COVID-19 pandemic has reversed years of progress in preventing TB transmission, meaning that for the first time in over a decade, tuberculosis deaths increased in 2020.

Conflicts across Eastern Europe, Africa and the Middle East, have made vulnerable populations more susceptible to TB, underscoring the need to ensure that commitments made by global leaders to end TB are met.

“Investments in TB programmes have demonstrated benefits not just for people with TB but for health systems and pandemic preparedness,” WHO said. “Building on lessons learnt from COVID-19 research, there is a need to catalyse investment and action to accelerate the development of new tools, especially new TB vaccines.”

Funding shortfall

Progress towards reaching current TB targets including the WHO Director-General’s “Find.Treat.All” is at risk mainly from a lack of funding.

Between 2018 and 2020, 20 million people received TB treatment. This is halfway to the five-year target which ends in 2022. During the same period, 8.7 million people received TB preventive treatment. This is only 29 per cent of the target of reaching 30 million from 2018 to 2022.

The Global Fund/Thierry Falise

A laboratory technician in Bangladesh manipulates multi drug resistance tuberculosis (MDRT) samples. Photo: The Global Fund/Thierry Falise

The situation is even worse for children and adolescents with TB, WHO warned.

In 2020, an estimated 63 per cent of children and young adolescents with TB were not reached, or not officially reported to have accessed life-saving TB diagnosis and treatment services.

The proportion was even higher (72 per cent) for under fives, according to the UN health agency, which said that almost two-thirds of eligible children under five did not receive TB preventive treatment and therefore remain at risk of falling sick.

New recommendations

To expand cover to populations most at risk from TB, WHO has issued new patient-centred recommendations to boost diagnosis, treatment and prevention. These include that:

  • Diagnostic testing should now include non-invasive methods, such as stools.
  • Rapid molecular diagnostics should be the initial test for TB diagnosis among children and adolescents.
  • Children and adolescents who have non-severe forms of drug-susceptible TB should be treated for four months instead of six months.
  • For TB meningitis, a six-month regimen is now recommended, instead of 12 months, to reduce the cost for families.
  • Two of the newest TB medicines to treat drug resistant TB (bedaquiline and delamanid) are recommended for use in children of all ages, making it possible for children with drug-resistant TB to receive all-oral treatment regimens, regardless of their age.
  • TB care should be decentralized so that more children and adolescents can access care or preventive treatment closer to home.

UN weather agency to spearhead 5 year early warning plan, boosting climate action

0
UN weather agency to spearhead 5 year early warning plan, boosting climate action
The UN set an ambitious five year deadline on Wednesday for countries to ensure that citizens worldwide are protected by early warning systems against extreme weather and climate change, the UN chief announced, marking World Meteorological Day.

Early warnings and action save lives,” Secretary-General António Guterres said in a video message during a ceremony marking the day, adding that the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) would “spearhead new action to ensure every person on Earth is protected by early warning systems within five years.”

The agency will lead the effort and present an action plan in November at this year’s UN climate conference (COP 27) in Egypt.

Crucial investment

Spotlighting early warning and early action, he underscored: “We must invest equally in adaptation and resilience.”

“That includes the information that allows us to anticipate storms, heatwaves, floods and droughts.”

‘Unacceptable’ inequity

The most recent report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) details the ongoing suffering, as “each increment of global heating” further increases the “frequency and intensity of extreme weather events,” warned Mr Guterres.

He said it was unacceptable that one-third of the world’s people – living mainly in least developed countries (LDCs) and small island developing States (SIDS) – are still not covered by early warning systems.

“In Africa, it is even worse: 60 per cent of people lack coverage.”

Better forecasting

Climate change has become a more stark reality in all parts of the world, leading to increasingly extreme weather, including intense heatwaves, droughts and forest fires.

Meanwhile, increasing moisture in the atmosphere is leading to extreme rainfall and deadly flooding, while ocean warming is fuelling more powerful tropical storms and rising sea levels.

“We must boost the power of prediction for everyone and build their capacity to act,” said the Secretary-General.

On this World Meteorological Day, let us recognize the value of early warnings and early action as critical tools to reduce disaster risk and support climate adaptation.” 

Investing to improve

Over the past 50 years, a climate or water-related disaster has occurred on average each day – taking the lives 115 people and causing daily losses of $202 million, according to a 2021 WMO disaster statistics report.

Although the number of recorded disasters has increased by fivefold over that period, improved early warnings and disaster management have saved the lives of many.

The growing number of disasters due to climate change is endangering implementation of a large number of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),” said WMO chief Petteri Taalas.

Noting that increasing investment in climate early warning services and related infrastructure is growing every-more important to climate adaptation, he described it as “one of the highest returns” going, for a modest stake.

“There is a need to invest $1.5 billion during the coming five years to improve the quality of the services and related infrastructures especially in the LDC and SIDS countries,” he flagged.

Warning systems

An integrated Early Warning System for floods, droughts, heatwaves or storms, alerts people to upcoming hazardous weather and informs governments, communities and individuals, so their impact can be minimized.

Using advanced computer models, they provide real-time monitoring on land and sea.

In addition to understanding forthcoming storm risks, a comprehensive early warning system must also include lessons learned from past events, to improve future response.

© WMO/Guillaume Hobam – Supercell thunderstorm in Colorado, United States.

‘Adapt now’

Despite the many benefits outlined in the 2019 UN-backed Global Commission on Adaptation report Adapt Now, including a tenfold return on investment, one in three people globally is still not covered.

The Glasgow Climate Pact, agreed during COP26 last November, emphasized the urgency of scaling up action for enhanced adaptive capacity, strengthened resilience and reduced vulnerability to climate change.

It also urged developed countries to significantly scale up their provision of climate finance, technology transfer and capacity-building for adaptation.

Video Antonio Gutierrez – Un Chief on World Meteorological Day here

WMO action plan

In achieving universal coverage of early warning services, WMO will seek to close observation gaps, expand country capacities for issuing warnings while simultaneously improving their ability to respond in a people-centred, inclusive and accessible manner.

The new plan seeks to build on existing WMO activities and partnerships, including with key agencies, countries and groups already active in the field.

This will require inputs from actors throughout the entire early action value chain to close early warning gaps.

EU moves towards joint natural gas purchase

0
brown metal tower common gas purchases

The European Union is moving toward the joint purchase of natural gas and ensuring its storage facilities are nearly full to try to avoid another crisis tied to its dependency on Russian energy, officials said Tuesday.

The 27-nation bloc acknowledges it has been far too reliant on Russia for natural gas and oil and has been struggling to find the right mix of sanctions to punish the Kremlin for invading Ukraine while still requiring Russian fossil fuels.

Low levels of gas storage “brought us to big difficulties in January where we have been kind of scrambling for additional gas for European consumption,” EU Commission Vice President Maros Sefcovic said.

With energy prices high and supplies low, the EU is looking at its last crisis – the Covid-19 pandemic – as a blueprint. The member states joined up to buy vaccines in huge quantities for an equitable distribution.

The draft conclusions of the summit obtained by AP include that “with a view to next winter, Member States and the Commission will urgently … work together on the joint purchase of gas, LNG and hydrogen.” The details of such a deal would still need to be worked out.

The Commission is tabling a legislative proposal today, introducing a minimum 80% gas storage level obligation for next winter to ensure security of energy supply, rising to 90% for the following years. To address concerns about continued high energy prices, the Commission has also adopted a Communication setting out the options for market intervention at European and national level, and assessing the pros and cons of each option. The Task Force would be supported by Member States representatives in a Steering Board. 

“I expect that this would be the approach which should be also endorsed by the heads of states and government,” during a two-day summit starting Thursday, Sefcovic said.

The Commission says it is ready to set up a task force on joint gas purchases at EU level that would be supported by member state representatives in a steering committee. A joint negotiating team led by the Commission would conduct talks.

“Europe should definitely use better its enormous weight, the scale of the European economy if it comes to the negotiating of energy prices,” Sefcovic said.

EU leaders already agreed in principle at a March 11 summit to phase out dependency on Russian gas, oil and coal imports by 2027.

The EU imports 90% of the natural gas used to generate electricity, heat homes and supply industry, with Russia supplying almost 40% of EU gas and a quarter of its oil.

New WHO web-based knowledge hub unravels the myriad influences behind our health behaviours

0
WHO/Handmade by Radhika

Ever wonder why we don’t eat and drink what is good for us, exercise regularly or follow the advice of public health authorities on getting vaccinated? The new WHO web-based knowledge hub of behavioural and cultural insights (WHO BCI-Hub) provides a one-stop-shop for those interested in the complex question of how our health is impacted by who we are, what we know and what we do. It also provides background on the barriers to and drivers of healthy behaviours and practices.

“The Knowledge hub is a great resource that will allow country stakeholders, colleagues and partners to understand behavioural and cultural insights. A one-stop-shop for all those interested in our area of work has not been available before, and we are happy to close this gap,” said Katrine Bach Habersaat, Regional Advisor, BCI.

In addition to inspirational videos, podcasts, reports, toolkits and other resources, users of the WHO BCI-Hub can search for specific products and case examples from research to implementation. The hub provides an opportunity to show how BCI can be used across a range of areas to improve health and well-being.

WHO/Europe needs your help to grow the site even more, so please reach out to us at info@bci-hub.org with any reports, videos, podcasts or anything else that you think deserves a space on the site. Over time, as the content featured on the site grows, there will be more opportunities to explore how BCI have been used in focus areas, countries or resources.

Behavioural factors, including social and cultural aspects, account for an overwhelming 60% of the determinants of health, compared to medical care, which accounts for just 11%.

Insights into BCI are profoundly changing the way we work with public health issues such as antimicrobial consumption, vaccine acceptance, mental health and health literacy. Furthermore, we have seen the application of BCI in real time as a complement to medical and epidemiological sciences in the response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The first phase of the WHO BCI-Hub, developed by the WHO Collaborating Centre for Culture and Health at the University of Exeter in collaboration with the Behavioural and Cultural Insights flagship at WHO/Europe, goes live this week.

To find out more about the BCI-Hub, watch the short video below or visit the BCI-Hub website.

Haiti: UN agencies warn of ‘unabated’ rise in hunger

0
Haiti: UN agencies warn of ‘unabated’ rise in hunger
While humanitarian assistance has been successful in averting a catastrophe, Haiti is experiencing a persistent rise in hunger levels, with many citizens suffering acutely, the World Food Programme (WFP) said on Tuesday.

  Alerting that 4.5 million Haitians are experiencing high levels of acute food insecurity, WFP pointed to lower-than-expected humanitarian food assistance and continued fallout from the last August earthquake as key drivers.

“Hunger levels are rising unabated as persistent political instability, growing inflation and recurrent disasters continue to conspire against the people of Haiti”, the agency advanced.

Briefing the media in Geneva from the Caribbean island nation, WFP Country Director Pierre Honnorat noted the situation is worrisome, “being the worst registered since 2018”.

Severe hunger

“Haiti forms part of a ‘ring of fire’ encircling the globe where climate shocks, conflict, COVID-19, and rising costs are pushing vulnerable communities over the edge”, he said.

According to recent projections, 45 per cent of the population will be in severe hunger from March to June, and of those, more than 1.3 million are estimated to be in the emergency phase of the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC).

The ongoing economic crisis in Haiti, characterized by a weakening currency against the US dollar, soaring inflation, and a hike in fuel prices in previous months, has reduced the purchasing power of many poorer households, making basics like food, unaffordable.

Ukraine effect

Furthermore, global food prices are at an all-time high, with the Ukraine crisis continuing to have a direct impact on food security.

UN humanitarians in Haiti warned that it would likely continue to hurt vulnerable people in the highly import-dependent island nation.

https://twitter.com/theIPCinfo/status/1504137032628682755?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1504137032628682755%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.europeantimes.news%2Fwp-admin%2Fpost.php%3Fpost%3D82910action%3Dedit

Mr. Honnorat reminded that 70 per cent of goods in Haiti’s stores are imported, and said the food insecurity “situation can only worsen if we don’t support Haiti”.

“This is also fueling insecurity, migration and sexual exploitation”, he added, calling for more international support. 

“It’s everything about those coping mechanisms that the population has to go for. And it’s different, they have to change their diet, they have to reduce their meals; but it also brings them to violence, it also leads some of them to prostitution”, Mr. Honnorat explained.

Prices rising with inflation

Detailing the situation in Haiti, Patrick David, Senior Programme Manager at the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), also briefing from Port-au-Prince, spoke further on the Ukraine crisis’s impact in perpetuating food insecurity.

“Haiti imports lots of food and fertilizers and the increase of prices in these products will contribute even more to inflation, which is already high in the country”, Mr. David said.

Mr. Honnorat added that the wheat that Haiti imports “is mainly coming from Russia and then coming from Canada as well…so if the wheat flour is going up, you will see a problem and the price has already multiplied by five in two years. So, we can only expect that it will multiply again.”

Limited room for optimism

WFP reported an improvement in areas in the south of Haiti, attributed to continued food assistance following last year’s major earthquake.

In its aftermath nearly a million people were left severely food insecure in the affected areas.

The UN emergency food agency has reached more than 355,000 beneficiaries with food and cash assistance worth US$ 8.2 million.

However, it warned the situation has deteriorated in other areas in the south where the emergency response has been limited.

© WFP/Theresa Piorr

 

Food distribution in one of the most affected communes after heavy flooding in the North of Haiti.

The northern region is also reeling from the aftermath of heavy flooding in late January, which resulted in deaths and injury with nearly 3,500 people seeking refuge in temporary shelters.

WFP distributed dry rations to 8,000 people impacted by the flood, as well as around 1,000 ready-to-eat meals in five days across six shelters.

Emergency response

Looking at long term solutions for a country that continues to struggle with multiple crises, WFP said it is strengthening national social protection and food systems by using rights-based transfers, income generation activities and community-level disaster risk reduction solutions.

To accelerate the return to school and resumption of school feeding activities in the earthquake-affected areas, WFP engineers are also in a race against time to rehabilitate schools.

First Person: Coping with Ukraine’s health crisis

0
First Person: Coping with Ukraine’s health crisis

“Since 2014 [when Russian annexed Crimea, and the conflict in the east of the country began], 3.4 million people in the Donbas region of south-eastern Ukraine have needed health-related humanitarian assistance.

In addition, when I started working here, the measles outbreak in the country was the second largest in the world, before our team helped in efforts to respond to it. And of course, we have had to deal with COVID-19 since 2020, so I have been working closely with the government to develop a national COVID-19 Strategic Preparedness and Response Plan, and been active in our pandemic response across the whole country.

Then, late last year, a polio outbreak was detected, so we started working, together with the Ministry of Health and partners, to get all children from the ages of 6 months to 6 years vaccinated.

Since 2016, Ukraine has been in a process of reform and, even with all these health emergencies going on, government reforms of the health system to move towards universal health coverage didn’t stop. New institutions have been created and new practices applied. All in all, as a public health professional, it has been very challenging, but very rewarding, to be working in Ukraine all these years.

Preparing for conflict

In Ukraine, we have always worked on emergency preparedness, but we started to do more hands-on work in October and November of last year. This included visits to the eastern part of Ukraine, filling our warehouses with supplies and delivering to selected hospitals, and bringing in colleagues from the regional office and headquarters to assess our operations.

In December, we also set up our emergency medical teams, briefed authorities, and translated WHO guidelines and materials focused on armed conflicts into Ukrainian.

Early this year, we also pre-positioned trauma supplies – essential life-saving materials and treatments for injuries – in our warehouses and hospitals, and Dr Hans Kluge, the WHO Regional Director, made a special visit to the country to discuss what needed to be done from a health perspective in the face of escalating violence.

© UNICEF/Andriy Boyko

A newborn baby is weighed on a scale at a hospital in Ukraine on 7 March 2022.

Facing the reality of war

At the end of February, when the military offensive started, it was the school holidays, so people were perhaps feeling more relaxed than usual, making the attack even more of a shock.

We had just signed an agreement with the national health authorities in January to take the health agenda further, so were really looking forward to all the positive changes we could make.

We were also supposed to have a WHO and World Bank-supported national conference on hospital reforms at the end of March, and were preparing to celebrate World Health Day on 7 April to make progress on primary health care. All of these initiatives had to be put on hold.

The last weeks have involved learning, reflecting, and coming to terms with the situation, because even though we have been preparing for hostilities for a long time, and more intensely in the last 4 or 5 months, none of us thought this would actually happen to such an extent.

Making a difference on the ground

I’m very proud that, due to our experience and team spirit, we are one of the UN agencies which has been able to deliver goods to Kyiv and other cities. Moreover, in all my 19 years of experience with WHO, I have never felt the 3 levels of WHO – headquarters, Regional Office and Country Office – come so closely together, listen to each other and prioritize the response.

We are finding solutions, and we really are getting our best brains and people together to respond. That’s how we got medical supplies from Dubai to Poland, from Poland to Ukraine, and from Ukraine to individual hospitals across the country. Our WHO Country Office is just a small team, but we are able to mobilize thousands across the whole organization to support Ukraine.

The health and humanitarian situation in the country is changing daily. In less than a month, over three million people have left the country and nearly two million have been internally displaced. This has happened faster than in any previous European crisis. There is no safe place in Ukraine right now, yet we need to ensure that health services are available.

© WHO/Kasia Strek

Hundreds of people fleeing from Ukraine gathered in shopping malls near the border crossing in Korczowa, Poland.

‘Every day things are getting worse’

Meanwhile, the military offensive continues, with a number of cities being entirely isolated – people are running out of food and water, and hospitals might not have electricity. Worse still, we have seen many attacks on health workers and health facilities as well as patients.

This is happening daily and is unacceptable. So, if you ask me how to describe it, every day things are getting worse, which means every day the health response is becoming more difficult.

Personally, I cope by working. It’s also important to sleep – fortunately for me, the more stressed I am, the better I sleep! It’s difficult, especially as everything I own, my clothes, my apartment, is in Kyiv.

But most importantly, I have my health and energy to support Ukraine.  Dealing with all of this is hard and all of us have stories to be told at a later time.

Over the last week we have been refocusing and regrouping to respond to the enormous health challenges the country now faces.

Three weeks ago, we dreamed that we could still do some of our development work, but the huge scale of the humanitarian crisis must be recognized.

Right now, we need to focus on the humanitarian response, but also start thinking about the recovery phase, not knowing whether this war will end in the near future, or if it will last for a long time.”

This First Person account was first published as an interview with Mr. Habicht on the WHO Europe website.
 

Artificial intelligence: the EU needs to act as a global standard-setter

0
Parliament’s Special Committee on Artificial Intelligence in a Digital Age (AIDA) adopted its final recommendations on Tuesday, concluding 18 months of inquiries.

The adopted text says that the public debate on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) should focus on this technology’s enormous potential to complement humans.

The text warns that the EU has fallen behind in the global race for tech leadership. As a result, there is a risk that standards will be developed elsewhere in the future, often by non-democratic actors, while the EU needs to act as a global standard-setter in AI.

MEPs identified policy options that could unlock artificial intelligence’s potential in health, the environment and climate change, to help combat pandemics and global hunger, as well as enhancing people’s quality of life through personalised medicine. AI, if combined with the necessary support infrastructure, education and training, can increase capital and labour productivity, innovation, sustainable growth and job creation, they add.

The EU should not always regulate artificial intelligence as a technology. Instead, the level of regulatory intervention should be proportionate to the type of risk associated with using an AI system in a particular way.

Risks of mass surveillance

The draft text also stresses that artificial intelligence technologies could pose crucial ethical and legal questions. It highlights the challenge of reaching a consensus within the global community on minimum standards for the responsible use of AI, and concerns about military research and technological developments into lethal autonomous weapon systems.

MEPs say that certain AI technologies enable the automation of information processing to an unprecedented scale. This paves the way for mass surveillance and other unlawful interference and poses a threat to fundamental rights, in particular the rights to privacy and data protection.

Authoritarian regimes apply AI systems to control, exert mass surveillance and rank their citizens, or restrict freedom of movement. Dominant tech platforms use them to obtain more information on a person. Such profiling poses risks to democratic systems as well as to the safeguarding of fundamental rights, say MEPs.

Quote

Lead MEP Axel Voss (EPP, DE) said: “With the AIDA report we clearly show that artificial intelligence will be a booster for digitalisation and a game-changer in global digital competition, and our AI roadmap puts the EU in a position to take the lead.”

“The EU now has the unique chance to promote a human-centric and trustworthy approach to AI based on fundamental rights that manages risks while taking full advantage of the benefits AI can bring for the whole of society. We need a legal framework that leaves space for innovation, and a harmonised digital single market with clear standards. We need maximum investment and a robust and sustainable digital infrastructure that all citizens can access”, he added.

AIDA Committee Chair Dragoş Tudorache (Renew, RO) said: “Our future global competitiveness in the digital field depends on the rules we put in place today. These rules need to be in line with our values: democracy, rule of law, fundamental rights, and respect for the rules-based international order. This is paramount, as the struggle between authoritarianism and democracy is becoming more and more acute – and unfortunately more deadly, as we have seen with Russia’s unjustified invasion of Ukraine.”

Next steps

The report was adopted by the Special Committee with 25 votes to 2, with 6 abstentions. It will be put to a vote by the full House in May.

Background

The AIDA Committee started its work in September 2020. In its mandate, the committee was tasked with exploring the impact of AI on the EU economy and its different sectors, analysing the AI approach of third countries, and charting the road ahead. The committee held a number of hearings and debates to feed into the report. The AIDA final report is the committee’s main output.

Throughout this process, the members and staff gathered expertise and insights on various aspects of artificial intelligence. This work fed into the committee’s final report, which aims to establish an AI Roadmap up to 2030. This meeting also concluded the work of the committee.

Greek Foreign Minister lead humanitarian aid to Mariupol

0
Greek Foreign Minister to personally lead humanitarian mission to Mariupol

Greek Foreign Minister to personally lead humanitarian aid to Mariupol

Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias announced his intention to personally escort the humanitarian aid to Mariupol where thousands of ethnic Greeks live. This was reported in the press service of the Greek Foreign Ministry.

Greece announced the death of ten of its citizens in Mariupol.

” [… ] Unfortunately, the war in Ukraine continues unabated.

Our priority, the priority of the Greek government, is the protection of our Greek community and the civilian population.

For this reason, I have taken two decisions.

The first is to set up a coordination and reception team in Bucharest. The ambassador will be the leader, Mr. Kostellenos, and our ambassador in Bucharest, Ms. Grammata, Mr. Dohtsis and Mr. Androulakis will participate, who will leave soon.

I also ask today to send an official note to the Ukrainian side to facilitate and to the Russian side another note not to hinder the sending of humanitarian aid to Mariupol.

I intend to personally accompany this assistance in coordination with the President of the International Committee of the Red Cross, Mr. Maurer, with whom we are already in contact.

After all, I stressed the need to protect the civilian population in my speech yesterday at the EU Council of Foreign Ministers in Brussels and in my private meeting with HR/OD Mr. Borrell, whom I asked and made public statements. for Mariupol.

As Prime Minister Mitsotakis clearly stated, Greece will continue to be present in the region. In a region where the Greek element has been established for centuries.

Our first step, when things return to normal, will be the reconstruction of the Mariupol maternity hospital. And beyond that, our coordination with the EU to do what we can, to bring the city back to its previous state and to help our Greek community to return to normal after the tragedy.”





Selon le gouvernement grec, plus de 150 citoyens grecs, membres d’équipage de navires et Grecs de souche ont été évacués de la région.

Committee to protect journalists anounces release of Ukrainian journalist Viktoria Roshchina

0
CPJ protect journalists
Screenshot of https://cpj.org/news/

Ukrainian journalist Viktoria Roshchina released after 10 days; at least 4 other journalists briefly detained, has reported the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Paris, March 22, 2022 – Account first published by the Committee to Protect Journalists.

The Committee to Protect Journalists, an independent, nonprofit organization that promotes press freedom worldwide, and defends the right of journalists to report the news safely and without fear of reprisal has reported that Russian forces in Ukraine must immediately cease detaining journalists and should ensure that members of the press can cover the war in Ukraine freely, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Tuesday.

On Tuesday, March 22, the independent Ukrainian television station Hromadske announced that Viktoria Roshchina, a reporter with the station who went missing on March 11, had been released the previous day.

That statement says she had been detained in Russia-held territory by “occupiers” who had forced her under pressure from Russian security forces to record a video–posted on pro-Russian media and social media outlets–in which she denied being held by Russian forces. The statement said that the journalist would “tell the whole truth about the detention and captivity herself in the near future.”

Separately, on Monday morning, unidentified armed men briefly detained four journalists with the Ukrainian news agency MV in the southeastern Russian-occupied city of Melitopol, according to a statement by the agency and a report by the Ukrainian National Union of Journalists (NUJU).

“Russian security forces and anyone acting on their behalf must immediately stop detaining journalists covering the war in Ukraine,” said Gulnoza Said, CPJ’s Europe and Central Asia program coordinator, in New York. “Multiple journalists have gone missing or been detained under murky circumstances since the war began, and these incidents only serve to harass the press and stifle independent reporting.”

Roshchina, who covered the Russian invasion in eastern and southern Ukraine, disappeared while on her way to the southeastern city of Mariupol, as CPJ documented at the time. She is currently in Ukrainian-controlled territory and is heading to meet with her relatives, according to the Hromadske statement.

Separately, at about 6 a.m. on Monday, unidentified men with weapons detained MV executive editor Yevgeniya Boryan, journalists Yuliya Olkhovskaya and Lyubov Chayka, and retired MV publisher Mykhaylo Kumok at their homes in Melitopol, and took them to an undisclosed location, according to that report by the journalist’s union, quoting MV General-Director Anna Medvid, and a Facebook post by Kumok’s daughter, Tatiana, who was also among the detained.

Their captors held the journalists, Tatiana, and Kumok’s wife, gave them “preventive talks” to discourage their reporting, and then released them, according to another report by the NUJU.

The men also seized journalists’ personal phones and Olkhovskaya and Chayka’s computer servers, according to that report and a Facebook post by NUJU head Serhiy Tomilenko. CPJ could not determine whether the journalists’ devices were returned upon their release.

Tatiana wrote that the men, whom she referred to as “occupiers,” were “probably trying to get cooperation” from the journalists; the report by MV identified the men as “representatives” of the occupation government. Russian forces previously detained Melitopol Mayor Ivan Fyodorov on March 11 for several days, according to reports.

Quoting Medvid, the journalists’ union wrote that the MV editorial office was searched last week by unspecified people. Medvid said that those people “want us to be loyal and supportive. I did not agree, and we parted.”

Previously, Oleh Baturyn, a journalist for the Ukrainian newspaper Novyi Den, was released on March 20 after he went missing for eight days in the southeastern Ukrainian city of Kakhovka; CPJ could not immediately determine who was responsible for his abduction.

CPJ emailed the Russian Ministry of Defense but did not receive any response.